In this episode, we discuss changing your name to escape your online reputation, Best Buy sending a cease-and-desist to a priest, towns using Google Earth to enforce local laws, this week's technology Darwin Awards, whether the Web is actually dead, a Justin Bieber Twitter prank, the Facebook "dislike" button scam, a wrap-up of this year's BlogHer conference, and a new, Wii-based drawing tablet.

On this week's show, we discuss Google and Verizon's net neutrality proposal, the Dell Streak "tablet", new podcasting app for BlackBerrys, text-based "fast follow" option on Twitter, whether iPhone users have more sex, the resignation of HP CEO Mark Hurd, a Web site that pays women to give men advice, and new streaming options for Netflix.

In this episode, we discuss the new BlackBerry Torch, plans in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia to ban BlackBerry services, the FBI ordering Wikipedia to remove its official seal from the site, the questionable past of a man who claims to "own" 84 percent of Facebook, whether e-mail is dead, another lawsuit over school webcam spying, and what women in tech you should be following on Twitter (besides us, of course).

On this week's show, we discuss a lawsuit that says the iPad is useless in direct sunlight, a government ruling that will allow you to jail break your iPhone, CTIA suing San Francisco over its cell phone radiation labeling law, the Wikileaks Afghanistan war documents, what women are really doing on the Internet, whether parents are responsible for their kids' cyber-bullying, "Jessi Slaughter," and a water-powered clock.